Mainstream music of the 1970s was an ultra-groovy blend of disco, funk, R&B, soul, and rock โnโ rollโwhich also means that this particular decade had some of the best dance tracks of all time. Indeed, itโs hard not to tap your toes and bob your head to songs from this era, even if you wouldnโt normally consider yourself much of a dancer.
Whether youโre the first on the dancefloor or jamming among your fellow wallflowers, itโs practically impossible not to dance (or at least want to dance) to these tracks from the 1970s.
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โWhen Will You Be Mineโ by Average White Band
For a group that called themselves the Average White Band, the riffs and grooves that they came up with were anything but mundane. Their 1979 single, โWhen Will You Be Mineโ, from Feel No Fret, is a perfect example of a 1970s song that practically forces you to start moving. Silently tapping your toes inside your shoes counts, too, by the way. The Scottish bandโs album peaked at No. 15 in the United Kingdom and No. 32 in the United States. This particular single might not be their best-known. But weโd argue it has one of the best grooves.
โRikki Donโt Lose That Numberโ by Steely Dan
Steely Dan is one of those โlove them or hate themโ groups from the 1970s, and songs like โRikki Donโt Lose That Numberโ do little to quell the uncertainty from the general public. The 1974 track opens the bandโs third album, Pretzel Logic. After it peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100, it also became Steely Danโs greatest commercial success. Sure, Steely Dan gets a bad rep for being โdad rock.โ But letโs be real: all those icy cold shoulders denouncing bands like Steely Dan make it awfully hard to get your groove on. Lifeโs too short.
โYou Make Loving Funโ by Fleetwood Mac
Christine McVieโs track about an affair with Fleetwood Macโs lighting director (that she told her husband and fellow bandmate, John McVie, was about a dog) is peak 70s Fleetwood Mac. Itโs groovy. Itโs funky. The underlying premise is a relationship that isnโt working out versus one that is, hence its all-too appropriate inclusion on the bandโs seminal 1977 album, Rumours. And most importantly, itโs an absolute bop that is impossible not to dance to. In fact, weโd argue that its many musical sections and vibey Clavinet part make it one of the danciest songs of all the 1970s.
โSuperstitionโ by Stevie Wonder
Speaking of vibey Clavinets, thereโs just something about that instrument that will give a song an irresistible groove. Stevie Wonderโs โSuperstitionโ is another prime example of the organ being the coolest instrument in the mix. The 1972 song was the lead single from Wonderโs 15th studio album, Talking Book. The B-side closer is one of those 1970s songs that still sound as funky and fresh as they did when they first came out. The track topped the charts in the winter of 1973, heating up everyoneโs speakers with that iconic Clav riff.
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